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单词 lion
释义

lion

/ˈlʌɪən /
noun
1A large tawny-coloured cat that lives in prides, found in Africa and NW India. The male has a flowing shaggy mane and takes little part in hunting, which is done cooperatively by the females.
  • Panthera leo, family Felidae.
Three year-old male lions grow manes that vary in color from black to blond....
  • Male lions develop thick woolly manes on the neck and shoulders, signifying maturity.
  • For instance, by choosing to hunt at a different place or time, coyotes avoid wolves, cheetahs avoid lions, and leopards avoid tigers.

Synonyms

big cat;
king of the beasts;
lioness
1.1The lion as an emblem (e.g. of English or Scottish royalty) or as a charge in heraldry.This design is blazoned as ‘Gules, three lions passant guardant in pale Or,’ and it is still the coat of arms of England today....
  • I needn't see the heraldic lion on his clothes' front to know where he came from.
  • He wanted a unique way to show his support for England and so he had the three lions emblem and St George's cross engraved on his false teeth.
1.2 (the Lion) The zodiacal sign or constellation Leo.
1.3A brave, strong, or fierce person.Rather, it's in betting on which young lion may take him out.

Synonyms

hero, man of courage, brave man, lionheart, lionhearted man;
conqueror, champion, conquering hero, warrior, knight, paladin
1.4 (usually literary lion) A notable or famous author.Maybe just the act of posting a novel in a forum where bored Babus can read it and slam it will be enough to awaken the sleeping literary lion in aspiring novelists....
  • Even bigger if you add that he's working with a major publisher and that literary lion Kurt Vonnegut calls the book ‘… nothing less than the soul of an extremely interesting human being at war…‘
  • Endre Farkas' invitation to celebrate literary lion Pablo Neruda's 100th birthday inspired a series of performative prose-poem vignettes, Proem Cards From Chile.

Synonyms

celebrity, person of note, dignitary, notable, VIP, personality, public figure, celebutante, pillar of society, luminary;
star, superstar, big name, leading light, idol, magnate
informal big shot, bigwig, big noise, big wheel, big cheese, big gun, somebody, celeb, hotshot, megastar
2 (Lion or British Lion) A member of a touring international rugby union team representing the British Isles.But the former Wasps centre is not about to embark on a playing career in Australia - he has won a national competition to follow the British Lions rugby union team on tour....
  • A sensation in union with his hat-trick of tries against a 1955 British Lions rugby union side, he delighted the crowds at Knowsley Road for 10 years in the 1950s and 1960s.
  • ‘Rob is a great player and it says everything that he was the first choice scrum-half on two British Lions ' tours only for injury to get in the way,’ he said.
3 (Lion) A member of a Lions Club.He was a Lion, who joined in 1975 and became the first Secretary of the Virgin Gorda Lions Club.

Phrases

the lion's den

the lion's share

throw someone to the lions

Derivatives

lion-like

adjective ...
  • More often than not, that last little bit doesn't get thrown in with lion-like qualities.
  • The lion-like predator, which could stand nearly one metre and weighed about 250 kilograms, had a pair of retractable thumb-like claws to disembowel or drag prey up trees.
  • Yellow dogs were also more lion-like in appearance.

Origin

Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French liun, from Latin leo, leon-, from Greek leōn, leont-.

  • The lions known in parts of Europe and around the Mediterranean in early times were not African but Asiatic lions, rare animals in the 21st century. The name lion came into English from French, and ultimately from Greek leōn. The Anglo-Saxons had used the Latin form Leo, which was overtaken by lion for the animal, but which is still the name of a constellation and sign of the zodiac.

    In ancient Rome lions and other wild beasts provided entertainment in the amphitheatres. Christians and other dissidents were left at their mercy in the arena, a practice behind our phrase to throw someone to the lions. After the terrible slaughter of British soldiers during the First World War, the phrase lions led by donkeys became popular as a way of encapsulating the idea that the men had been brave, but had been let down by their senior officers. It is not clear who first came up with the description, but the French troops defeated by the Prussians in 1871 were described as ‘lions led by packasses’. From medieval times until the opening of London Zoo in the 19th century, the Tower of London contained a menagerie of unusual animals, among which were lions. Not surprisingly, they were a great attraction for visitors to the city, and the phrase to see the lions sprang up with the meaning ‘to see the sights or attractions of a place’. From there a lion became a celebrity or noted person, a sense which gave us lionize, ‘to treat as a celebrity’, in the 1830s. See also beard

Rhymes

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更新时间:2024/9/20 6:42:37